Ctesibius water clock

The long unmeasured pulse of time moves everything. There is nothing hidden that it cannot bring to life, nothing once known that may not become unknown. Sophocles, Ajax

The first clock probably recognized by humans was the sky in the simplest form first by the day and night period. Various observations of the sky were used as a clock. Hesiod around 750 BC tells farmers when to carry certain activities based on the position of different stars. Time was measured for example by the apparent motion of the sun using sundials.

He also was the first discoverer of the gnomon; and he placed some in Lacedaemon on the sun-dials there, as Favorinus says in his Universal History, and they showed the solstices and the equinoxes; he also made clocks. He was the first person, too, who drew a map of the earth and sea, and he also made a globe; Diogenes Laertius, Life of Anaximander

The time flow is a mystery and physicist believe that time is an illusion. But were comes the word that “time flows”? Probably from the water clock, a tank holding water, with a very small hole in its bottom, from which the water slowly drips. The level of water sinks and its height is a measure of the time passed since it was full of water. As Heron of Alexandria says the amount of water flown is proportional to the time (as the water to water so the time to time):

The problem is that the flow of water depends on how much water is in the container.

Ctesibius invented probably one of the first controlled systems in history. Possibly the earliest ancestor of today's industrial-robot devices is the clepsydra (κλεψύδρα, "water thieve") or water clock (pronounced as “klep-suh-druh”), which improved upon the hourglass by employing a siphon principle to automatically recycle itself. Like Ctesibius also Philon of Byzantium used a similar float regulator mechanism to keep a constant level of oil in a lamp.

Waterclocks were built in China (1086 by Su Sung, a working model can be seen in action in the Manor House Museum UK), Korea (architect: Chang Yeong Shil, 1438, can still be seen at Kyeong Bok Gung.), Egypt (1500 BC) and in Syria (700 BC). Greece (ca. 5th century BC ) Ctesibius is reputed to have constructed such a clock about 250 BC. He used another container to fill the container from which the water flows keeping its water level constant though a floater that opens a valve if the water falls below a level. The water now is collected in another container outside and its level shows the time for example using a floater with a pointer on a calibrated time scale.

Although simple and fair, it was somewhat imprecise. Ctesibius wanted to transform the clepsydra from a device to indicate the end of a given time into a continuously working clock. He noticed that the water dripped out faster when the jar was full, slowing as it emptied. Consequently it was of no use for displaying time during the process. His simple solution was to ensure the jar was always full. He introduced a second container with a bigger hole, which dripped faster to ensure the clepsydra remained full and so dripped at a constant rate. A clepsydra that never emptied was of no value, however, so he had to find a way to measure the water that came out, and for this he used a float with a pointer in a third container.

Water drips from the higher container to the lower container. As the water level rises in the lower container, it raises the float on the surface of the water. The float is connected to a stick with notches, and as the stick rises, the notches turn a gear, which moves the hand that points to the time.
On the water, the floating rack could turn a toothed wheel to a number of “parerga: whistling birds, moving puppets, ringing bells, and the like.”, but this did not work. Afterwards, he reconstructed the water clock and this time he made a pointer, which moved at steady rate. This pointer would mark hours at different length of lines traced on a vertical cylinder. In the 16th century AD the clepsydra was used by Galileo to time his experimental falling objects.

This invention is similar to the mechanism used in the 20th-century flush toilet. The floating valve is the predecessor of the floating ball in the upper chamber of the toilet. After a flush, the floating ball sinks with the declining water level, pulling open the water valve with its metal arm. The incoming water fills the vessel again, raising the ball so that its arm closes the flow of water at the precise level of "full.

Ctesibius was also responsible for transforming a legal device into a clock so accurate that it would not be surpassed until the seventeenth century. In Alexandrian courtrooms a defendant was permitted to speak for a certain regulated time. The device they used to ensure fairness was the clepsydra - 'captured water' - and was a simple jar with a hole. A specific quantity of water - measured according to the crime - was poured into the container and the defendant could speak until the water ran out.

Ctesibius invented other less known devices, but the most important invention is the principle of pumping air to make other things work

Source: www.mlahanas.de

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